Categories
- Arts & Entertainment
- Business
- Advertising
- Bookkeeping
- Branding
- Careers
- Careers Employment
- Change Management
- Communication
- Corporate
- Customer Service
- Entrepreneurialism
- Ethics
- Financing
- Franchise
- Fundraising
- Human Resources
- Management
- Marketing
- Marketing Direct
- Negotiation
- Networking
- Outsourcing
- Partnerships
- PR
- Presentation
- Public Relations
- Resumes Cover Letters
- Sales
- Sales Management
- Sales Teleselling
- Sales Training
- Small Business
- Strategic Planning
- Team Building
- Top7 or 10 Tips
- Venture Capital
- Workplace Communication
- Communications
- Computers
- Culture & Society
- Disease & Illness
- Fashion
- Finance
- Food & Beverage
- Health & Fitness
- Hobbies
- Home & Family
- Home Based Business
- Internet Business
- Legal
- Pets & Animals
- Politics
- Product Reviews
- Recreation & Sports
- Reference & Education
- Religion
- Self Improvement
- Shopping
- Travel & Leisure
- Vehicles
- Writing & Speaking
Information
Keeping Employees: Creating a "High-Retention" Culture
Submitted: 2007-01-17 15:38:04
Print this article | Tell a friend | For publisher |
We all know this old piece of wisdom: "It's easier and cheaper to keep an existing customer than it is to find a new one." Substitute the word "employee" for "customer" and it's just as true.
Employee turnover can be one of the worst plagues on a small business. Not only is continuity of knowledge a very important aspect to growth and success, the time and money spent on constant recruiting, hiring, and training can be a fatal burden. Plus, high turnover can have a profoundly negative impact on the morale and job performance of the remaining employees (and the owners!)
If you can find a way to keep turnover lower than the average for your industry, it equates to a significant competitive advantage for you.
So, how do you know when turnover is too high? I suggest both internal and external benchmarking.
Internally, track your voluntary turnover each year. Look for averages and trends. If it suddenly goes up, it should serve as a red flag. Strive for annual improvement.
Externally, compare your company to your peers in your industry. You can obtain reports on various financial and operational metrics from Dun and Bradstreet, on the web, and from trade associations in many industries.
Notice I used the phrase "voluntary turnover." That's a distinction worth noting and monitoring. Voluntary turnover refers to employees who resign of their own accord. Involuntary turnover would include terminations and layoffs. I recommend you keep an eye on both types of turnover. If your voluntary turnover is high (compared with your internal and external benchmarking), it might signal problems with your culture, management, or new hire orientation. If involuntary turnover is high, it might mean your hiring and screening process is not rigorous enough, or that you have a tendency to hire too quickly when busy and then have to let people go when things slow down.
While you can't jump to conclusions and it isn't always cut-and-dried, it's absolutely worth your time to analyze your turnover statistics so you can stop problems in their tracks and avoid the associated pain and suffering that goes with high turnover.
Let's look at some of the components of a high-retention environment.
Pay and Benefits Dozens of surveys have been published that illustrate how pay is not the most important factor in employee satisfaction. That may be true, but everyone is looking out for themselves and their families. At minimum, your employees need to feel that they are compensated fairly for the work they do, both in terms of salary and benefits.
Just as with employee turnover statistics above, you can find out about competitive pay rates by job description, industry and geography from a variety of sources.
Management/Supervision In the classic business book, First, Break all the Rules, co-authors Marcus Buckingham and Curt Coffman say: "It is better to work for a great manager in an old-fashioned company than for a terrible manager in a company offering an enlightened, employee-focused culture. It's not that these employee-focused initiatives are unimportant. It's just that your immediate manager is more important."
I agree 100%. You've probably heard the saying, "People don't leave companies; they leave supervisors." People want to be trusted, to be valued for their contribution, and to be respected both as employees and as people. They want feedback, encouragement and praise. All of these are available in abundance and are free.
Checklist for Creating a High-Retention Culture
- Provide competitive pay and benefits.
- Provide clear expectations and directions.
- Provide ongoing job skills training, starting with a thorough new-employee orientation.
- Provide all the tools and resources needed to do the job.
- Give frequent and honest feedback on job performance. Offer praise or constructive criticism whenever either is appropriate, but don't sugar-coat or nit-pick. Strive for even-handedness.
- Squelch bureaucracy, red tape, and needless hassles.
- Squelch office politics and the rumor mill.
- Encourage, pay attention to, and actually use employee input and feedback. Bosses do not have a monopoly on good ideas.
- Communicate in all directions: up, down and sideways. There's almost no such thing as too much communication.
- Reward high performance.
- Low performers need to be reassigned, coached to success, or in some cases, they need to be removed from the organization. Leaving low performers or disruptive employees in place is a sure way to hurt morale among the rest of the team.
- Conduct annual Employee Satisfaction surveys. Allow anonymous responses to increase participation and candor.
- Conduct exit interviews when employees quit. Use this feedback to improve your culture and retention.
- Implement a well-thought-out Hiring System
- Pay attention to all the areas covered by the High Retention Culture Checklist above, plus any others that you think apply to your company. Fix what's broken and fill gaps as needed.
- Monitor your employee turnover rate. Set goals and strive for continuous improvement versus both internal and external benchmarks.
------------------- © 2006 Bill Collier, business coach, consultant, professional speaker, author and entrepreneur. He is the author of the book "How to Succeed as a Small Business Owner ... and Still Have a Life." His website is http://www.collierbiz.com and his email is bill@collierbiz.com. Sign up for our free monthly "Small Business Sucess" ezine. |
Article source: Expert Articles
Most Recent Articles in Team Building category
- Benefits of team building - By: John Peter
For a corporate company to develop, team building exercises are important because it improves their group skills, communication and bonding. One of the games that can build a team is taking up chocolate challenge. This game is light hearted and requires co-operation, mental and artistic skills. The success of most organizations depends on the ability of individuals to build effective teams. - Have a Cracking Corporate Christmas Party - By: Adam Singleton
Corporate Christmas parties are a great way to end the year on a high and celebrate all your hard work with colleagues. Why not get out of the office and make the evening as enjoyable and memorable as possible. - Team Building Enhances Motivation Skill - By: Shijina Shijina
An organization is required to frame effective team in order to achieve the company goal more successfully. If an organization is looking build a strong team, then at first proper goal setting should be compiles. - Employee Recognition Gift Ideas - By: Angel Cruz
In a company, it's important to recognize employees for their hard work. And what better way to thank and appreciate them, than to give them recognition gifts? - The Top 10 Reasons Your Staff Wants to Quit - By: Tarsem Singh
From an employee's perspective, management often conducts itself in ways that make no sense. When the economy is slow, jobs are few and far in between or people are fearful, staff will tolerate management behaviors and policies that are nonsensical (in their eyes) or they judge are harmful. - Our Top Ten Team Building Exercises - By: Amy Linley
Given the varied personalities, communication skills and personal agendas individual members bring with them to the team, getting your team to work cooperatively can be a challenge. - Custom E-learning Solutions - By: Amjad Ali
About CommLab India is a Custom eLearning Solutions Company based in India. Since 2000, it has been providing state-of-the-art eLearning services to organizations across the world in the areas of Learning Consultancy, Custom Courseware and Learning Technology. Some of our reputed clients are BC Hydro, George Washington University, Kawasaki and Deloitte. We are preferred vendors to some of the Fortune 500 companies like Alcoa and Hill-Rom. - Corporate Training - By: Amjad Ali
With technological strides and encouraged by the need to get the best out of domain experts, corporate training has come to gain its own place in the sun. Organizations now feel the need to move to a high-paced zone of learning speed which is effective to learners and comes at a reasonable price to organizations. This new form of learning now prevalent in companies is called e-learning. For companies seeking big time change, to outsource the learning function is a tried and tested approach. - Helpful Tips to Motivate Your Employees - By: William King
This article provides tips which will help the owner of a business to motivate his employees effectively, especially by interacting with them personally, and by maintaining good working conditions. - The Joy of Collaboration and High Performing Teams - By: Stephen James Joyce
Training that grows people and teams in tandem is the secret of most successful organizations. You are frying two fish in the one pan. Beyond growing the individual the team requires a reason to exist and know its prime function.
